The Brussels Post, 1927-6-1, Page 6WEDNESDAY, J1'Nisl 1, 1i 7.
Direct Cream
Shippers Wanted
MR. C R Li:A M PROD ('CER :
Ship your ere: m dist ct to The: Pahn
Oren cry, Palmersth , Ont. t)
shippers pay uo hi. -11 tritelc tte ct,sts, ,:,r 1.li , r:,'
tennutiselona. \\'e iuple!1 c es and !..ay ryit i•*c+
chars;e•4. l'..y twice !c 11 trweth lea il.tnk ?I:,i,t•v
l'ird• r, p%ry;JI :t '. at par intt h re. Order s aur LL
Gills; tiltl ;y.
1 as v ri,>i, fro ',ern e,,feety., P t?a,B•., qst� ,e� ^?�9
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Sundi' y ch
ol 1'+des o y ES -
BY CHARLES G. TRUMSULL
(Editor of The Sunday School Timos)
PETER PREACHING TO
GENTILES
Sunday, June 5.—Acts 10 and 11.
Golden Text;
For there is no difference between
the Jew and the.Gre•ek: for the same
Lord over all i.; rich unto all that.
-call upon Him (Eton. 10:19).
Peter had been elven a most ex-
traordinary rontmiesion by the L nd
Jesus Christ. and he hail ;_nee 011
fulfilling it since the Pay of 1', nte-
cost. When t in tilutta. a 1 1 i I •tor
voiced his great c lnf e ion is: J. us
was "the Christ, the. Son of the liv-
ing Gad." Chr et said to tester: "1
will give unto thee the keys of ti
Kintedom o1 Heaven." The 1The1ni
of this has been quoted herr Mond
"A key 1had e of powi nt• .aat'
ority (eon -leer,- Lei. "!2' Rev.
7). The atentol1e history explei
and limits this trust, for it was Pe:
who o1 r nee} the door of Chri am
portunity to Israel on the Day ef
Penteeost (Act-: 5-421, and to t -
Gentiles in the house of Collude -
(Acts 10:34-4111. There wan no a--
sumption by Petr of any ethos au-
thority (Acts 1+5:7-11.).`•
So this week's lesson has been
called Peter's Second re, of the
Keys: the Gospel Given to Gentiles,"
We must renumber it was a 112W
thing in the history of the world for
any person outside of Israel to have
equal access to God by simple faith
apart from the works of the law.
But a 'new -dispensation, a new age,
had begun by the death and resur-
rection of Christ. It was hard even
for Jews who truly believed on
Christ to realize this,
Cornelius was a Loran centurion,
He was a godly man, given to good
works and much prayer. God was
now going to save hint and his house -1
hold by letting in the light of the'
Gospel through Peter. An angel of
God disclosed this to Cornelius in
vision, and told hint to send for Pe-
ter.
Peter meantime, in another city,
going up to a housetop for prayer,
fell into- a trance, and God spoke to
him. God often works simultaneous-
ly in different lives that may be. at a
distance from each other, in order to
bring ills 90l'posee to pass. If God
r tells us to do something which in-
volves another, we may be confident
that God is preparing that other also.
In his trance Peter saw all man-
ner of beasts and creeping things
and fowls, and heard a voles, "Rise,
Peter; kill and eat." He shrank
back with the words, "Not so, Lord,
for I have never oaten anything that
,s common or unclean."
W. Graham Scroggie, Edinburgh,
has e ille'el attention to the :harp
cottrad;ction in Peter's words, "Not
so, Lard," We may believe that The
wee not intending to sin, but
bow can one :say "Lord" anti "not
et the same time? We must ci-
! thsr• fret the "Not so" go or 9 •ny" that
Christ is our Lord. Corn..•1iu' re-
t:i:s was better, in the vision he
ha; 1 =t had, as he ,said, "What is it,
.e Or Paul's "Lord, what wilt
I . . hese.. me do?" (Acts 9:6).
[tat Peter did God's will promptly
!end completely when he understood
and we must not stake the com-
mon mistake of saying, as 0001e do,
]fat Peter's ideas about unclean
food before this time had been prim-
itive or ignorant, ora mistaken not-
ion of religious duty. In refraining
from "unclean" food hitherto, Peter
had been obeying God's own law
(Lev. 11), which was now clone
away by Christ's fulfilling of the
law as the new age of grace began.
Yet Peter could not know just
what the vision meant, until circum-
stances. made it plainer. It is often
so with us to -day, as God discloses
His will for us step by step. We
may not know why or where he is
leading, but we shall know if we
follow His leading.
When Cornelius had sent for Pet-
er, and Peter learned the facts, the
meaning of the vision was explained.
Peter realized that Christ's work of
grace was so mighty and all -suffi-
cient that believing Gentiles could be
as believing Jews in God's sight.
Now he understood the Lord's mes-
sage, "What God hast cleansed, that
call not thou common."
He preached the Gospel to Corn-
elius and his kinsmen and near
friends who were assembled to lis-
ten. It was and is a Gospel of facts,
It was not enough for these Gentiles
merely to know who Christ was.
11
§;1
is
P r" l a l!
)
If you, as n merchant, could be constant-
ly r;.ce1in4? uer; pro i.0etive r•ilstomer0, y011
couid 1;c:.1 your business healthy and !tour-.
issuing without advt:etjtilig.
• Elul the Mehl re:1s,.r(1 -,vl(y ATI\'EIi'CIS•-
1Nl1 is a (001(1d, pitying jnl•cstuient is Le -
cause it does this missionary work for you,
constantly, efficiently, at low cost and lenses
yon free to render personal service and plan
further business ((8•elopinent.
Look into the value to you of advertising
in 'ME _irreSSf+'L'i POST from it business -
building point of view, Talk it over with till.
INGRESZf. 110UEST1SE
SUCCEEDS 13RYC1
Dr. David Jamieson, former
Speaker of the Ontario I.egietaturc,
ha, been appointed e1 ivomalt of the
Mothers' Allowance Commission to
succeed Rev. Peter Bryce, who has'
retired. Dr. Jamieson formerly re-
presented South Grey and wase de- 1
feated in the 1923 provincial election !
by Farquhar Oliver, 'UFA). Condi-
t
THE BRUSSELS" POST
x r e x x x x x x x« x. x x« x. x .'. w,•. ,. x• x x x .. w•4 4 x, res
k$iLt;}a'y'e,, !
COL. 3, L. RALSTON E
C.':\N \I).\' :VI INISI' P:K O }EU NSE
eien Sexoe ee w• a. ,v. +w w + r .>,rx ,x., ;•,y,- et tx:;x.gene ee ,
('oleo. l the.He ne ,nk `Jit Lie The lo.. tvhseh the++hattnlion
ton nee,tuu, 1).l'., list'., (`.M.G., 11 teres when ('i,lonel Borden Lit it
ti ii., 1. 1 11, who fres. :,neSint d 1V0,.11(13',. "nr, hot e nroae, tlttin:_•
mini.t•t of uClewd deamee n'1 the man to etep into the birne)i than! i
! lith
Oct,.)1.er l•( -t, horn at a+!^ Lieutenant-Colonel Ralston it wmdes
]t rst, Nova brut, t. on 110 dath slue- Mom been difficult to find, His in -
net, 1881 and a Hinman,. lana he hes 1 - ilf•n(0 over his Wren 1100 been de-
maims' ever r tint c Ire , orfs, edit- .smiteel a, "nothing short of extra- i
cation Wes obtained in in. hone• ordinary," due to his high seine of
tout at the Amherst t .Seetlemy; lit- what was right, indomitable ch u u•- I
,r when he had chosen the law for t,m and absolute fe:u•le.snes•1, coin- 1
his profeesion, h, paseed on to the hired with phenonurnal pewee; of ;
Dalhousie law stheol, On the 101h lrhyeicel endurance. Colonel Ralston '
al Hca, t 113, h+ was railed .0 the +wits always a strict dieeiplieeeien
Nova Seines hat and 8:13.6 •ulutitted end utterly intolerant of inefficiency
-
to partnership in a law firmat Hol � or slackness, but all make knew that
• tax. Exceptional gifts as an advo-� ander hon they were being 1,'d by an
tate, combined with an extrap,1inary officer who was no brave, res000rce-
capacity for sustained work, soon aid and skillful as any in the Can -
- established his reputation, and when I adian corps, whose energy was it=ex-
in 1915 he temporarily doffed the 1 haustible, who never spared h+nisclf,
date.
They must know what Christ had
done. - It is not enough for us to
tell people that Christ is the Son 02
God; we must tell them that Christ
died for our sins, and was raised
again from the dead, and in that
iour of all who believe on Hhn and
way alone was able to be the Sav-
His sufficient work. As Peter told
all this, and came to the climax,
"that, through His name, whosoever
believeth in Hint shall receive rends.-
sion of sins," the miracle happened;
"While Peter yet snake these wards,
the Holy Ghost fell on all them
which heard the word." They were
born again, saved, baptized by the
Holy Spirit, filled to overflowing as
they spoke with tongues and inagnni-
fie d God.
The Gospel had begun to be given
to the whole world, Jow and Gentile
alilc It was a practical demonstra-
tion of what Paul wrote a0 year:
later: "That ye, being in than past
Gentiles in the flesh . . , without
Christ, being aliens from the com-
monwealth of Israel, and strangers
from the covenants of promise, hav-
ing no hope, and without God in the
world; but now, in Christ Jt:sur, ye
who sometimes were far ori are
masse nigh by the blood of Christ.
For He is our peace, who hash made
both one, and hath broken down the
middle wall of partition between us
. , and came and preached peace
to you which were afar off, and to
them that were nigh" (Eph. 2: 11-
18),
UNIRONED BATH TOWELS
Bath towels dried outdoors are
fresher and sweeter when not ironed.
Fold evenly when taking from line
and stack as if ironed.
ASPARAGUS USES
Asparagus, though expensive, eon
earn its way if housewives will use
stalks for soup and seasoning after 1
tips have been served.
MILK CUSTARDS
Soft custards, with white of egg
floating on top, or baked custards in
vanilla, coffee, orange or almond
Haver, give children both milk and 1
eggs and are often more tempting to
them than either food alone,
Colonel Ralston, Minister of . Mili
tie in Canada,
who set an example of forethought
and consideration for the welfare of
his men that was followed by every
i officer and N.C.O. under hitt com•
mond. With It all he possessed a
very keen sense of humor and a
charm of manner that i$ infectious..
In the lighter moment that came ev-
en in the war he could vie with any
in telling a good story, of which he
had at command a seemingly inex-
haustible fund to draw upon.
For some months after Lieutenant-
Colonel Ralston had assumed come
- bland, the 86th Battalion; like most
of the units of the corps, was en-
gaged in ]folding the line or in train-
ing in the G.H.O. reserve for the fin-
al operations that ended the war.
The battalion had just come into line
again on the 30th.July, when a very
daring reconnaissance was carried
out in the Famboux sector b• a
young officer, Lieutenant Evans, and
a small party. The party penetrated
1 the German wire but, being discover -
ed, had hastily to withdraw. On the
patrol retching its front line it was
found that Lieutenant Evans was
missing. Without a moment's hesi-
tation Lieutenant-Colonel Welton,
accompanied by Lieutenant Adams,
proceeded into No Man's Land in an
endeavor to find the missing officer.
The enemy, now thoroughly aroused,
were sweeping the area with intens;
trench mortar, machine gun and rifle
fire, but with an utter disregard of
his safety Lieutenant-Colonel Rale.
ton searched the ground until, hear-
ing groans, he located the missing
officer lying wounded within the ene-
my's lines. He thereupon worked
his way through the enemy wire 40
yards in depth, reacnett Lieutenant
Evans, and, despite the fact that
bombs were now being flung at him
from three enemy posts, he succeed-
ed, with, the assistance of Lieutenant
Adams, in withdrawing the desper-
ately wounded officer.
For this extraordinary act of cour-
age Lieutenant-Colonel Ralston was
recommended for the award of the
Victoria Cross. The higher authori-
ties refused to entertain the recom-
mendation 01; the ground that it was
not the business of a commanding
officer to risk his life in such a man-
ner, and it may be mentioned as a
mat es of some interest that the br
gade commander received s repri-
mand for insisting on the recom-
mendation for the award being re-
considered 011 its merits regardless
of the regulation, which in hie opin-
ion should not have been aup'iod.
The authorities were doubtless right,
but the humanity and the heroism
of the act remain.—Canadian De-
fense Quarterly.
barrister's gown for khaki, he had
become recognized as one of the
leader's of the provincial bar.
• Mr. Ralston had no previous; mili-
tary service when the '..•ar broke out
but he very early took Steps to close
out his nifliits preparatory to joining
the forces, Commissioned on the
2nd .1pri1, 191:1, as a p'ovisicmal
lieutenant in this 93rd Cumberland
Regiment (N.P.A.M.), he underwent
his courses of instruction, qualified
for his rank, and when the 85th Bat-
talion, C.E.F., was authorized on the
27th September, 11)15, was gazetted
as one of its or•iginu1 subalterns.
With this unit 0111011 afterwarda be-
came the Sloth Nova Scotia Highland-
ers, he served until the conclusion of
the war, end for that period his his-
tory becomes merged in that of the
regiment.
On the llth November, 1915,
Lieutenant Ralston was promoted to
captain, and on the Ind February,
1916, he succeeded Major Phinney
as adjutant. Pronfotton to the rank
of Major came just prior to the sail-
ing of the battalion for England in
October, 1910.
On the 10th February, 1977, the
:1 Battalion proceeded to France
as an nnbrigaded unit of the •lth
Canadian Infantry Brigade. The
cool intrepidity of its attack on Hill
145 on the evening of the 9th April,
without artillery support, was the
foundation of its reputation as "one
of the most efficient and most trust-
ed battalions in the Canadian Corps"
as it has been describes: by Sir Ar-
thur Currie, During the five days
that the 85th were engaged in this
great battle Major Ralston was con-
stantly in the front line and "on
several occasions took command of
the advanced reconnaissances of the
enemy lines under machine gun and
shell fire,"
Subsequent to the capture of the
Vimy Ridge the battalion was involv-
ed in seine very nasty fighting in the
vicinity of Lens, and went "over the
top" three times in two days.
Centre of Canada's Confederation Celebration
Lti:rz;�
earelf
Wanted
3 e4,1
V%'e pay Highest Cash Price for
Cream. 1 cent per lb. Butter Fat
extra paid for all Cream delivered
at our Creamery.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Brussels' ls' Creamery.
Phone 22
Co.
Limited
r> >.m.- .,.,.+,." -, V15^..23
! The Car Owner's Scrap -Book
(13y the Left Hand Monkey Wrench)
ADJUSTMENT OF BRAKES
Do not adjust the brakes Foo close
when the car is without a load, If
this is done the brakes will bind
when the car is loaded and the
wheelbase slightly extended. Routh
roads will augment- the trouble.
While tightening the brakes d.r not
get then too tight, It is easy to set
thein up too far, and then the opera-
tor wonders where all his newer is
gone. Jack up both wheels and Fee
if they are still free after adjust-
ment.
WORTH REMEMBERING
A great proportion of motor remi-
ttent; are due directly to faulty eq-
uipment. These accidents can be
eliminated if ears are inspected and
1 overhauled regularly. Here are a
few vital points to remember:
Chains should be used during wet
weather.
Motorists should not tolerate noisy
gnu filers.
Check up on all steering g,ar con-
nections.
See that tires are in good condi-
tion and wheels are stable. -
All cars should be equipped with
bumpers, as they will lessen damage
due to collision.
Brakes should be kept in efficient
condition at all tinter, and frequent
tests should be made.
CHANGING OIL IN NEW CAR
A. new engine requires more fre-
quent oil changes than an engine
which is "broken in" becauss new
bearing surfaces throw off a greater
number of metal particles. After
the first 500 miles of driving., it as
advisable to change Brie oil in the
engine. Repeat this operation every
1,000 miles in warm weather, If
this is not done, particles of metal
from the wearing surfaces and a
certain amount of dirt and rust
which accumulate in the crankcase
oil may be forced to the engine op-
erating parts. Unless all the oil is
drained out of the crankcase foreign
matter will remain there. It is not
sufficient to add only enough oil to
keel) the proper level.
Wet brake linings can be burned
dry by running for a short distance
with the brakes set.
^Do not use kerosene or gas)line in
water used for cleaning the wind-
shield or other glass, as the film of
the oil remaining holds dust and
moisture,
ATTEND TO COOLING SYSTEM
1 Every motorist 0)100111 plan a
"spring cleaning" of the cooling
system of his car to assure a summer
of good radiation and more satisfac-
tory engine performance. Here is
the simple task: Start the engine.
Ojren the drain cock at the bottom of
the radiator. Then turn e garden
lfoee_ into the top opening and ad-
just the flow to equal the less from
the bottom strain. After 15 minutes
of this procedure allow tate radiator
to drain empty. Close the drain
, coot: and fill with wooer. The rea-
son for operating the engine i,; to
flash out not only the radiator, but
also the entire water circulation eys-
tem of the engine block. Seale and
. other foreign matter accumulate in
the circulation system during ;t win-
ter of driving. It would not be el-
iminated entirely by flushing the ra-
diator with the engine not in opera-
tion.
Do not abuse tires by drivhng in
car tracks and deep ruts or by scrap•
ing curbstones.
An emergency cotter pin can be
,,rade ft'orn a common hairpin by a
few twists of the pliers.
A defective valve is often the
cause of slow leaks in the tire,
Keep the horn motor clean so that
the merest touch of the button will
bring a response. In an emergency
there Is no time to be lost in horn-
ing.
Longer wear is had from tires if
each one is removed from the rim
once a year, the rim cleaned thor-
oughly and painted, after which a
new liner is added and the tire re-
placed.
The higher the candlepower of the
headlamp the snore current it will
require and the greater will be the
drain on the battery.
THE WAY TO SUCCESS
"Hero are fifty begging let-
ters," said the millionaire to his
private secretary, "Answer them
• all with a refusal."
"Yes, sir,"
"And you will observe that
every one has,a three -halfpenny'
stamp enclosed for a reply."
"Yes, sir"
"Well, send them circular re-
plies, The postage will only be
a half penny,"
..t1,a[.0wme®ENPSYpL-rRx.FJNnReV1VILIIM +.vnCpe .b 0.1.2" 11344 :6-:,, N.T. w .r.. 4).Snr.,... .^m..u, 11,,LVC.1 .1a
�y1r....Wancvmxm �amvpaCM.A M.arrmx�tPooAv.1x,® canmpecmm:,:manu®umfrt .'t 1M1
mcgactmag
M en ns
a' ; mg
ETTER CREAM
ETTER BUTTER
ETTER PRICES
We are now p(epared to (grade your Gemini honestly,
gather ili twice a week and deliver at one Creamery each (lay
WO 11t% It, We gather with covered trunk Io keep sne off it,
We pay it Premium of 1 cent per lb, bnUeiefat for Spec -
bile neer that of No, 7 gen do, and 3 Cell is per lb, butter -fat for
No, 1 glade over that of No, 2 grade, _„
r11 110010 pr}neiple of the improvement in the quality rif
Ontario butter is the elimination of 590ennd and ,dT grade
meum. 'This may be ercomplisbed by paying the producer
of good cream tt heti Pr pries' per 9000(1 of butler -fat than 18
paid to be medium', of poor cream. We solicit yom' patron-
age and co-operation for better market.
4''4Ve tv111 loan you a can,
See our Agent, T. C, MeCALL,
or Phone 23to, Brussels,
Th S of 1rth Cr ,1 ne y